Time Loop: The Flight That Never Landed

July 2, 1955 - New York City.
It was an unusually warm morning when Pan Am Flight 914 prepared for takeoff at LaGuardia Airport. The silver propeller-driven DC-4 aircraft shimmered under the summer sun, a beacon of modern travel.
At 9:06 AM, the engines roared to life, and the plane, carrying 57 passengers, soared into the sky, destined for Miami, Florida. The journey was estimated to take just over three hours.
But at 9:42 AM, somewhere over the Atlantic, the radio crackled and went silent. The plane's blip on the radar screen froze, then vanished without a trace.
Back at LaGuardia, panic erupted. The search-and-rescue operations began instantly, but yielded nothing. No debris, no distress call. Just an empty sky.
For the families waiting in Miami, hope turned to heartbreak. Among them, 26-year-old Clara James gripped a newspaper tighter in her hands. Her fiancé, Mark Ellis, had been on that flight.
Three months later, the investigation was shut down, the files classified. But Clara wasn't ready to forget. She began her own archive, driven by a quiet whisper that refused to believe Mark was truly gone.
Then one night, a letter arrived. No return address. Just a single piece of yellowed paper inside. The handwriting was faded, but clear:
"Clara. I'm still here. I don't know where. But it's not 1955 anymore."
Her hands trembled. It was Mark's handwriting. But the postmark read: "March 10, 1992 - Caracas, Venezuela."
And suddenly, the sky she thought had stolen her love... whispered that the story wasn't over.
